About this book

The human relationship to water is fundamentally social in nature (in addition to being biological and ecological), and it is through this that we construct relations among class, gender, ethnicity, and nationality. Changes, therefore, to human/water relations are also transformative in these social relations and terms. Based on first-hand research, The Social Life of Water addresses a diverse range of contemporary conflicts and crises including the impacts of commodification, urbanization, and technology on the availability and quality of water supplies. Each case study speaks to a local set of issues but the overall perspective is global with representation from all continents. Although most chapters are informed by a sense of crisis, the primary goal of The Social Life of Water is to demonstrate the ways in which water influences all domains of social life including the economic, ecological, institutional, political, religious, and aesthetic. The issue of water as a human right from indigenous and non-indigenous perspectives is addressed, and the foundational principles and processes needed to inform equitable and sustainable approaches to water governance for the twenty-first century are outlined.

"This book fills an important niche on water related issues in anthropology by focusing on social and cultural manifestations of water management, use, and conflict [...] The organization is appropriate and effective."– Benedict J. Colombi, American Indian Studies Program, University of Arizona

Contents

List of FiguresList of TablesNotes on ContributorsAcknowledgements

Introduction John Richard WagnerPart I: CommodificationChapter 1. Contesting Equivalences: Controversies over Water and Mining in Chile and Peru Fabiana LiChapter 2 Dam Nation: Cubbie Station and the Waters of the Darling Veronica StrangChapter 3 Water and Ill-being: Displaced People and Dam-based Development in India Lyla Mehta

Part II: Water and TechnologyChapter 4 Aesthetics of a Relationship: Women and Water Nefissa NaguibChapter 5 La Pila de San Juan: Historic Transformations of Water as a Public Symbol in Suchitoto, El Salvador Hugo De BurgosChapter 6 Not so Boring: Assembling and Reassembling Groundwater Tales and Technologies from Malerkotla, Punjab Rita BraraChapter 7 Kenyan Landscape, Identity and Access Swathi Veeravali

Part III: UrbanizationChapter 8 Health Challenges of Urban Poverty and Water Supply in Northern Ghana Issaka Kanton OsumanuChapter 9 The Risk of Water: Dengue Prevention and Control in Urban Cambodia Sarah C. SmithChapter 10 The Water Crisis in Ireland: The Socio-Political Contexts of Risk in Contemporary Society Liam Leonard

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Biography

John Wagner is an Associate Professor of Anthropology at the University of British Columbia, Okanagan. He conducts research in Canada, the US, and Papua New Guinea and has published several journal articles on water governance in the Okanagan Valley. In 2007 he was lead guest editor of Customs, Commons, Property and Ecology, a special edition of Human Organization devoted to an analysis of Pacific Island customary property rights systems. Recent publications include Water and the Commons Imaginary in the Public Anthropology Forum of Current Anthropology (2012).